Both here and in all your churches throughout the whole world; we adore you, O Christ, and we bless you. Because by your Holy Cross [+] you have redeemed the world. AMEN.
(Franciscan prayer upon
entering or departing from a holy place)
Today we celebrate the feast day of the second most beloved saint in the Christian tradition. Behind Mary, the Mother of Jesus, Francis of Assisi has been the most widely venerated holy figure in western Christianity ever since his brief but tumultuous life in the north of Italy in the 13th CE.
Perhaps the greatest example
of such veneration came from the current Pope, a Jesuit who bypassed all the
possible icons of his own religious community as well as many previous popes to
choose the name Francis for his papacy. Given the radical nature by which
Francis of Assisi sought to live out the humble life of Jesus, it is hardly
surprising that in a hierarchy noted for its focus on power and prestige this
would be the first time that Francis has been used as a papal name.
A Balance of Action and
Contemplation
Francis and his companion Clare would become the founders of a world wide movement called Franciscanism. Francis represents the active side of the order, the folks in the soup kitchens and running the many Franciscan hospitals, many named after the Franciscan Saint, Elizabeth. Clare, on the other hand, represents the contemplative side of the order. She and her cloistered sisters spent their days praying for the world and their brothers and sisters who engage it. Franciscans recognized from the beginning that both the active and the contemplative are needed for spiritual balance and healthy faith communities.
Historically this movement has had two focuses. The first was on those Jesus called the anawim, the little ones. This term referred both to age as well as power. Jesus followed a long tradition of prophetic focus on the orphans, the widows, the aliens and the poor – the powerless in the lowest strata of the society. And for the Franciscans, this has played out in their work among those very same populations.
Paul Granlund, “Dancing Francis,”
Viterbo University, LaCrosse, WI (1987)
The Stories That Reveal
St. Francis
There are a number of
stories about the life of Francis that have been collected over the years. Like
the life of Jesus, those stories took on mythical and legendary qualities as
they developed in the imaginations of the story tellers. The Little Flowers
of Francis is the primary collection of those stories and there are two
stories in particular that speak to us on this day we pronounce G-d’s blessings
on our animal companions.
Francis and the Wolf, Gubbio, Italy
The second is about Francis preaching to the birds, something he loved to do. Many of us admire the beautiful fresco Giotto painted of this story on the upper walls of the basilica. Note, Francis presumed that the birds could understand him and that they, in turn, had something to communicate to Francis as well. Indeed, the birds would fly away only after Francis had blessed them.
Note how different these behaviors are from that of our ordinary lives. We human animals tend to believe that it is only our fellow humans who have anything to say worth hearing. That, my Brothers and Sisters, is the sin of anthropocentrism. But what might we learn if we, like Francis, paid attention to the animals that grace our lives? What sermons might they have for us?
The Sermons Our Animal Companions Are Preaching
Saidy the Beagle
Our dogs are living lessons
in loyalty. The common name Fido means I am faithful in Latin. They provide us
companionship and protection. In return, they desire our attention, our care
and, yes, our snacks. So what might our lives look like if we treated one
another the way our dogs treat us?
Anhinga, Lake Underhill
Our birds offer us
lessons of fragility and a freedom those of us who are earth-bound can never
quite attain. There is a reason that birds are so often associated with Spirit
in the arts and in world religions. Birds require our care, particularly in assuring
that the context in which they live is hospitable to life. So, what would the
quality of our air be like if we lived there?
Gecko on the front porch
Our reptiles, amphibians
and rodents are our most down to earth companions, quite literally. They remind
us of the value of grounding ourselves daily, becoming aware of who we are,
where we are and fostering a sense that we are OK here and now. Like birds,
they, too, require habitats that permit them to survive. Many non-human animals
around the world are now looking to their fellow animals, the human animals, to
see if there will be a world for them on the other side of climate change. What
lesson might these creatures offer a world facing mass extinctions?
Jerry the giant koi
Finally, our fish swim about in confined spaces containing water, oblivious of the world outside their immediate habitats. It is said that fish don’t understand the concept of water since without it, they simply would not exist. That is true of human animals, as well, as a number of our western states are discovering. Human caused climate change and fouling of water could render a number of places on our planet uninhabitable within our lifetimes. If our fish could talk, what sermon might they preach us this morning?
A World Charged With
the Grandeur of G-d
Francis and his followers have always pointed us to what poet Gerald Manley Hopkins called a world “charged with the grandeur of God.” The question today is whether we will respond in gratitude and humility to that divine gift by listening to our fellow inhabitants of the natural world and heeding the alarm they are sending.
(Collect, Feast of St.
Francis of Assisi)
Note: All paintings are from the Basilica of St. Francis in Asissi; the animals are denizens of New Coverleigh
Harry Scott Coverston
Orlando,
Florida
If the
unexamined life is not worth living, surely an unexamined belief system, be it
religious or political, is not worth holding. Most things worth considering do
not come in sound bites.
Those who
believe religion and politics aren't connected don't understand either. – Mahatma
Gandhi
For what does
G-d require of you but to do justice, and to love kindness, and to walk humbly
with your G-d? - Micah 6:8, Hebrew Scriptures
Do not be
daunted by the enormity of the world's grief. Do justly, now. Love mercy, now.
Walk humbly now. You are not obligated to complete the work, but neither are
you free to abandon it. - Rabbi Rami Shapiro, Wisdom
of the Jewish Sages (1993)
© Harry
Coverston, 2021
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1 comment:
Just a response, Harry+, of gratitude for the beauty of this message. Thank you.
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